n his first arrival in
the new land, Frobisher sent a party ashore on a small island at the
entrance to Frobisher Bay. Here he told them to bring him anything
that they found "in token of Christian possession" of the
land. This action was taken as a first formal attempt to justify
English use of the newly discovered country.
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"At lengthe, after diuerse attemptes, he commaunded his company,
if by anye possible meanes they could get ashoare, to bring him
whatsoeuer thing they could first find, whether it were liuing or
dead, stocke or stone, in token of Christian possession, which
thereby he toke in behalfe of the Queenes moste excellente maiestie,
thinking that therby he might iustify the hauing and enioying of ye
same things that grew in these vnknown partes."
(George Best's account of the 1576 voyage)
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Photograph: Steven Darby
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"Some of his companye broughte floures, some greene grasse, and
one brought a peece of a black stone, much lyke to a seacole in
coloure, which by the waight seemed to be some kinde of mettal or
Mynerall. This was a thing of no accompt, in the iudgement of the
Captain at the first sight. And yet for nouelty it was kept, in
respect of the place from whence it came."
(George Best's account of the 1576 voyage)
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The consequences were enormous when a London assayer
claimed that the stone was high grade gold
ore. Because of this stone, Arctic
Canada was to experience an invasion of English over the next two
summers, and the first attempt to plant an English colony in the
New World.
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Sixteenth century assaying was based on a
mixture of alchemy and science. This picture of assayers at work is from
De Re Metallica by Georgius Agricola, first published in 1556,
which was the principal text on mining and metallurgy at the time of the
Frobisher voyages.
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The news that there was gold in the black stone picked by Frobisher
from an Arctic beach set off the first gold rush in Canada. The
investors in Frobisher's first voyage joined with others to form
the "Company of Cathay". Queen
Elizabeth was one of the major stockholders, and subscribed £1000.
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